CLEVELAND – Quarterback. Cleveland Browns. No. 22 overall selection of the draft, but not the initial player the Browns picked in Round 1.

It all currently applies to Johnny Manziel and used to describe Brady Quinn, Cleveland’s designated savior in 2007, seven years before Johnny Football inherited that hefty mantle.

Quinn never lived up to advance billing and now seems concerned Manziel’s off-field interests will also render him incapable of restoring the downtrodden franchise to glory — and, perhaps, worse, might even tarnish it.

“I think he has all the ability in the world. He’s probably got the best offensive coordinator (Kyle Shanahan) for him to succeed. And he’s got some talent around him especially if (all-pro WR Josh) Gordon ends up not being suspended,” Quinn told SiriusXM NFL Radio.

But then he took out the needle while referencing Manziel’s latest viral turn on social media, a short video clip of him talking into a stack of money like it’s a cellphone while sounding less than coherent and uttering an expletive.

“The thing I’m most worried about is what you are kind of saying off the field. Some people say you can work hard, play hard. But I think my biggest issue with it is when you are drafted in the first round you are the face of the franchise,” Quinn said. “And when you’ve got a video that comes out like that, I understand he’s trying to have a good time and live his life off the field, but there’s a little kid watching that and now he’s looking up to him as a role model.

“And for me personally, I have a little bit of an issue with it. I don’t think that’s the way you want to conduct yourself. I mean, if you were asking (Browns owner) Jimmy Haslam, is that really what you want the face of your franchise doing, and having out there?”

Quinn said Manziel needs to be aware of his teammates’ perception, too.

“I just don’t think it’s right,” Quinn said. “I don’t think it’s respectful to the other veteran players, too, who right now are probably taking care of their bodies, trying to prepare to go into a winning season right now instead of doing things like that off the field.”

Many outsiders, especially non-Clevelanders, have expressed similar sentiments.

But for the time being, team brass seems content to let Manziel enjoy the spoils of being a high-profile, rich 21-year-old as long as he gets his work done.

Besides, what did poring over the playbook and flying under the radar off the field do for Quinn, Tim Couch, Colt McCoy and so many other Browns quarterbacks over the last 15 years?